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Longer Working Hours and Maternal Mental Health: A Comparison of Single vs. Partnered Mothers

Research output: Working paperDiscussion paper

Published

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Longer Working Hours and Maternal Mental Health: A Comparison of Single vs. Partnered Mothers. / Simpson, Julija; Wildman, John ; Bambra, Clare et al.
IZA Institute of Labor Economics, 2024.

Research output: Working paperDiscussion paper

Harvard

Simpson, J, Wildman, J, Bambra, C & Brown, H 2024 'Longer Working Hours and Maternal Mental Health: A Comparison of Single vs. Partnered Mothers' IZA Institute of Labor Economics.

APA

Simpson, J., Wildman, J., Bambra, C., & Brown, H. (2024). Longer Working Hours and Maternal Mental Health: A Comparison of Single vs. Partnered Mothers. IZA Institute of Labor Economics.

Vancouver

Simpson J, Wildman J, Bambra C, Brown H. Longer Working Hours and Maternal Mental Health: A Comparison of Single vs. Partnered Mothers. IZA Institute of Labor Economics. 2024 Mar 22.

Author

Simpson, Julija ; Wildman, John ; Bambra, Clare et al. / Longer Working Hours and Maternal Mental Health : A Comparison of Single vs. Partnered Mothers. IZA Institute of Labor Economics, 2024.

Bibtex

@techreport{b3e123ba2d174ae69de91b644e3690ed,
title = "Longer Working Hours and Maternal Mental Health: A Comparison of Single vs. Partnered Mothers",
abstract = "Over the past decade, single mothers have experienced increasing work requirements both in the UK and in other developed countries. However, despite significant rises in maternal employment over the past decade, little is known how increasing working hours may have affected their mental health. The aim of our study was to investigate the impact of increasing working hours on mental health of single mothers, and to compare this relationship to that for partnered mothers.We used 13 waves of the UKHLS (2009-2023) to estimate the relationship between changing working hour categories (1-16 hour per week vs. 17-25; 26-35; 36-40; and 41+) and mental health using fixed-effects models. We also investigated the role of potential mechanisms linking higher working hours and mental health, including role strain and additional income. Our findings suggest that increasing working hours from low (1-16 hours per week) to higher categories has a negative and progressively worsening relationship with the mental health of single mothers. Increasing hours to 17-25, 26-35, 36-40, and 41+ is associated with lower GHQ-12 scores by -0.7, -0.5, -0.8, and -1.1 respectively. For partnered mothers, there is no significant relationship with mental health across any of the higher working hour categories. Further analyses suggest increased role strain for single mothers as a mechanism helping explain these differences. We have found that higher working hours relative to part-time may be contributing to the worsening mental health of single mothers, at least in part due to increased role strain of having to balance work and family responsibilities. Such effects should be considered when developing future welfare policies for single mothers, to ensure that greater work requirements do not undermine the mental health of the already vulnerable population group.",
author = "Julija Simpson and John Wildman and Clare Bambra and Heather Brown",
year = "2024",
month = mar,
day = "22",
language = "English",
volume = "16875",
publisher = "IZA Institute of Labor Economics",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "IZA Institute of Labor Economics",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Longer Working Hours and Maternal Mental Health

T2 - A Comparison of Single vs. Partnered Mothers

AU - Simpson, Julija

AU - Wildman, John

AU - Bambra, Clare

AU - Brown, Heather

PY - 2024/3/22

Y1 - 2024/3/22

N2 - Over the past decade, single mothers have experienced increasing work requirements both in the UK and in other developed countries. However, despite significant rises in maternal employment over the past decade, little is known how increasing working hours may have affected their mental health. The aim of our study was to investigate the impact of increasing working hours on mental health of single mothers, and to compare this relationship to that for partnered mothers.We used 13 waves of the UKHLS (2009-2023) to estimate the relationship between changing working hour categories (1-16 hour per week vs. 17-25; 26-35; 36-40; and 41+) and mental health using fixed-effects models. We also investigated the role of potential mechanisms linking higher working hours and mental health, including role strain and additional income. Our findings suggest that increasing working hours from low (1-16 hours per week) to higher categories has a negative and progressively worsening relationship with the mental health of single mothers. Increasing hours to 17-25, 26-35, 36-40, and 41+ is associated with lower GHQ-12 scores by -0.7, -0.5, -0.8, and -1.1 respectively. For partnered mothers, there is no significant relationship with mental health across any of the higher working hour categories. Further analyses suggest increased role strain for single mothers as a mechanism helping explain these differences. We have found that higher working hours relative to part-time may be contributing to the worsening mental health of single mothers, at least in part due to increased role strain of having to balance work and family responsibilities. Such effects should be considered when developing future welfare policies for single mothers, to ensure that greater work requirements do not undermine the mental health of the already vulnerable population group.

AB - Over the past decade, single mothers have experienced increasing work requirements both in the UK and in other developed countries. However, despite significant rises in maternal employment over the past decade, little is known how increasing working hours may have affected their mental health. The aim of our study was to investigate the impact of increasing working hours on mental health of single mothers, and to compare this relationship to that for partnered mothers.We used 13 waves of the UKHLS (2009-2023) to estimate the relationship between changing working hour categories (1-16 hour per week vs. 17-25; 26-35; 36-40; and 41+) and mental health using fixed-effects models. We also investigated the role of potential mechanisms linking higher working hours and mental health, including role strain and additional income. Our findings suggest that increasing working hours from low (1-16 hours per week) to higher categories has a negative and progressively worsening relationship with the mental health of single mothers. Increasing hours to 17-25, 26-35, 36-40, and 41+ is associated with lower GHQ-12 scores by -0.7, -0.5, -0.8, and -1.1 respectively. For partnered mothers, there is no significant relationship with mental health across any of the higher working hour categories. Further analyses suggest increased role strain for single mothers as a mechanism helping explain these differences. We have found that higher working hours relative to part-time may be contributing to the worsening mental health of single mothers, at least in part due to increased role strain of having to balance work and family responsibilities. Such effects should be considered when developing future welfare policies for single mothers, to ensure that greater work requirements do not undermine the mental health of the already vulnerable population group.

M3 - Discussion paper

VL - 16875

BT - Longer Working Hours and Maternal Mental Health

PB - IZA Institute of Labor Economics

ER -